Networks of influence and infection: parental choices and childhood disease
- 15 May 2009
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Journal of The Royal Society Interface
- Vol. 6 (38), 811-814
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2009.0085
Abstract
Clusters of unvaccinated individuals are at risk of outbreaks of infection. When an individual's decision to choose vaccination is influenced by the choices of his social group, such clusters can readily arise. However, when the interactions that influence decision-making and those that permit the transmission of infection are different—for instance, when parents make vaccination decisions on behalf of their children—it is unclear how large the impact of this social influence will be. Here we use a modelling approach to represent social influence within a network of parents and the transmission of infection through a network of children. We show that the effect of social influence depends on the amount of overlap between the two different networks; large overlap means that clusters of parents who choose not to vaccinate are likely to have interacting children, generating clusters of unvaccinated children. Spatially local connections can further increase the impact of social influence. Outbreaks are most likely when parents who do not vaccinate have children who interact.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The effect of opinion clustering on disease outbreaksJournal of The Royal Society Interface, 2008
- MMR and the value of word of mouth in social networksJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 2008
- Perceptions of childhood immunization in a minority community: qualitative studyJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 2008
- An ongoing multi-state outbreak of measles linked to non-immune anthroposophic communities in Austria, Germany, and Norway, March-April 2008Eurosurveillance, 2008
- Social Contacts and Mixing Patterns Relevant to the Spread of Infectious DiseasesPLoS Medicine, 2008
- What maintains parental support for vaccination when challenged by anti-vaccination messages? A qualitative studyVaccine, 2006
- Measles Epidemic in The Netherlands, 1999–2000The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2002
- ‘Clustering of exemptions’ as a collective action threat to herd immunityVaccine, 2002
- Travelling waves and spatial hierarchies in measles epidemicsNature, 2001
- UK measles outbreak in non-immune anthroposophic communities: the implications for the elimination of measles from EuropeEpidemiology and Infection, 2000